By Christopher
Westley Mises.org 2-18-3
- It's finally dawning on commentators that the economy
is in pretty sorry shape.
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- Stock valuations have fallen 33% since Bush became
president; investors are still withdrawing money; consumer sentiment is
at historic lows; consumer debt is at historic highs; we face the worst
hiring slump in twenty years; production as measured by the GDP minus
government is falling; the deficit is ballooning; oil and gas prices are
soaring even as retail and travel sectors slash prices; and all of
Europe is clearly falling into recession.
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- What's a government to do? Why, go to war, of
course.
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- Sometime in March, it seems, US troops will cross the
Kuwaiti and Turkish borders and descend on Baghdad. While some
resistance is expected, it cannot amount to much, given that the Iraqi
army is only a shell of its former self of 12 years ago. It has become
so weak it almost seems misleading to call this conflict a war. The
Baghdad of 2003 isn't the Tokyo of 1945, notwithstanding the effect that
thinking otherwise would have on CNN's ratings next month.
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- In fact, as far as wars go, this one may be as
exciting as the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama to oust Manuel Noriega, a
wretched creep who, in hindsight, looks much like today's Saddam
Hussein. Both were dictators, although for some reason Manuel outscored
Saddam in the strongman category. Both were supported for several years
by millions of dollars, courtesy of hapless U.S. taxpayers. (N.B.: We
are certain that Saddam has the dreaded weapons of mass destruction
because many of them arrived in pre-1991 Iraq on U.S. transport planes.)
Both men also lived to see their suitors in Washington turn on them when
geopolitical realities changed. I hope that toppling Saddam will prove
to be as easy as toppling Noriega, if only because such a scenario would
be in line with conservative estimates for U.S. military and Iraqi
civilian casualties.
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- But I also hope that this conflict can still be
averted. Its full costs have yet to be considered. This is by design,
because their serious consideration would result in much less popular
support for the war.
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- The money costs of this war will be great. Larry
Lindsay, President Bush's former economic advisor, lowballed an estimate
of $200 billion. (Exactly one twenty-millionth of this amount would pay
off my student loan.) For this, Lindsay was told to resign for having
the political idiocy of stating such an astounding figure publicly, as
though a healthy democracy does not need to know such confusing data. If
truth isn't one of the first casualties of war, then Lindsay's
superfluous job surely qualifies.
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- At least when Lindsay was on the government payroll,
his salary was included in the White House budget. Next month's Iraqi
Follies, whatever billions they end up costing, are off-budget. After
all, budgeting the war would hinder the ability of the political class
to target new spending programs to areas of electoral importance, which
is why the Bush budget allows the state to grow at an even faster clip
than Lyndon Johnson dared.
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- This decision is not exactly a profile in courage,
especially for a president who, in his inaugural, humbly spoke of
"confronting problems instead of passing them on to future generations."
Since off-budget spending is most often financed by revving up the
dollar's printing press, it is likely that another cost of this war will
be a general increase in the price level in years' hence, furthering the
downward slide of real incomes that has been occurring over the last
three decades. Got milk? Years from now, you will pay for this war in
the form of higher grocery bills.
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- I say: If the war is so popular with the present
generation, then make it foot the bill now. Such an economic reality,
stated firmly by our leadership, may have forced a more realistic
assessment of the Iraqi threat and a more serious consideration of less
costly alternatives to the present buildup of forces. Surely it is
possible that the Constitutional provisions for "letters of Marque and
Reprisal" may have been equally effective at effecting regime change,
but at a fraction of the final cost.
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- But this cost, at least in an accounting sense, can
never be as devastating as others that do not fit in the official
statistics. These costs are the unmeasurables. For instance, resources
that your local factory might otherwise use for business expansion can
easily be appropriated to support military empire, and result in layoffs
and reduced output. The irony is that many of those who are laid off or
who otherwise cannot find work will be forced to join the military in
order to continue to support their families. Since politicians on the
left and the right are seriously considering military conscription, some
may have no choice.
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- There will be other immeasurables. The Constitution is
further weakened whenever the president aggressively uses troops against
countries that have not threatened us and whose greatest sin is the
inability to disprove a negative. One billion Muslims will become even
more angry and alienated, while the likelihood of future 9-11's in
response to this latest effort at regime change increases exponentially.
How many more liberties will a shaken public trade for security in
future years? Essential rights are already shaky ground. Is getting
Saddam worth it?
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- Such costs more accurately reflect the full cost of
the war in Iraq, and because they are hard to measure, they are more
often ignored. But they have been predicted.
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- "War," said Ludwig von Mises "is harmful, not only to
the conquered but to the conqueror. Society has arisen out of the works
of peace; the essence of society is peacemaking. Peace and not war is
the father of all things. Only economic action has created the wealth
around us; labor, not the profession of arms, brings happiness. Peace
builds, war destroys." (Socialism, p. 59)
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- Christopher Westley, Ph.D., is an assistant professor
of economics at Jacksonville State University. See his Mises.org Daily
Articles Archive.
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- http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1165
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